Cbus

Construction and Building Unions Superannuation (Cbus) is one of Australia's largest public offer industry superannuation funds. Cbus is run for the benefit of its members and does not pay dividends to shareholders.

Construction and Building Unions Superannuation (Cbus)
Public non-profit
IndustryIndustry Superannuation
Founded1984 
HeadquartersCasselden Place, Level 28,
2 Lonsdale Street, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Key people
David Atkin, CEO
Steve Bracks, Chairman
ProductsSuperannuation
RevenueA$50+ billion[1] (funds under management)
Number of employees
373
WebsiteCbusSuper.com.au

History

Established in 1984 for the construction, building and allied industries, Cbus now has over 777,000 members with over 450 staff across three states.

Cbus has over 136,000 participating employers and manages $46.7 billion of members' funds.[2]

Cbus also invests back into the building and construction industry through its $2.8 billion property development company Cbus Property.[3]

Corporate governance

United Super Pty Ltd is the Trustee of Cbus Superannuation Fund. The Directors of United Super Pty Ltd are appointed in equal number from member and employer associations in the construction and building industries. An Independent Director also sits on the board.[4]

The current Chair of the board is former Victorian Premier, Steve Bracks AC.

gollark: A search query which returns lots of results is going to take longer than one which returns none, mostly, thus you have access to some data you shouldn't.
gollark: For example, send a request to `https://interweb.site/search-some-private-data?query=thing` using a form or `img` or `script` or whatever, and see how long it takes (using `onload`/`onerror` handlers and such).
gollark: The timing attacks thing: since you can send GET requests to domains you probably shouldn't be able to, and time how long they take, you can infer some data you shouldn't be able to from other domains.
gollark: It is not okay, it is bees.
gollark: Because you can access cross-domain scripts and images without explicit optin by the site they're from, guess what? TIMING ATTACKS, *and* you can check whether there's an image or not at some arbitrary URL because while CORS weirdness won't let your code read the *content* of an image you include with `<img>` unless the site it's from opts in, you can check the width/height and whether it loaded or not.

References

  1. "CBUS 2018 Annual Report" (PDF). www.cbussuper.com.au. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  2. "Cbus Annual Report".
  3. "Cbus Property Website".
  4. "Federal Government Super System Review 2010". Archived from the original on 19 March 2015.
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